
Live pricing is coming soon. Get notified when it is available for this reference.
The ProDiver Chronograph is Oris's answer to what a professional saturation dive watch actually needs: 1000m water resistance, a helium escape valve at 10 o'clock, and a chronograph function built around titanium and legibility rather than dressy proportions. At 51mm, this is a purpose-built tool that makes no concessions to fashion. If you need the saturation spec, this is the ref that delivers it at an independent Swiss price.
Oris introduced the ProDiver Chronograph in 2014, positioning it above the standard ProDiver line as a specification-grade saturation tool. The caliber 774 is a modified Valjoux 7750, a column-wheel flyback variant that Oris specifies in-house and beats at 28,800 vph with a 44-hour power reserve. Oris has been transparent about the 7750 base, which is the correct industrial choice for a watch meant to enter service at pressure.
The titanium case has remained consistent since launch, with updates limited to dial colorways and bracelet refinements rather than structural changes. Production continues as of 2025, making this an active catalog reference.
The 51mm case is the primary filter: measure your wrist before considering this watch, as it fits large wrists and few others. Check the chronograph pushers for side play and confirm the reset action is crisp, as the 7750 pusher seals are a known wear point on dive-spec examples that have seen water. Inspect the bezel insert for chips at the luminous markers, which can lift on heavily used examples.
Verify the HEV at 10 o'clock seats and threads correctly, since stripped HEV housing is expensive to address. The bracelet clasp is robust but the diver's extension tab can develop slop; check it cycles smoothly before buying secondhand.
New retail runs approximately $4,500 to $4,800 USD depending on bracelet configuration. Secondary market prices sit $500 to $800 below retail for clean examples, giving buyers real value on a watch that was never over-distributed. The titanium case resists the cosmetic wear that hammers stainless equivalents, so lightly used examples are genuinely lightly used.
There is no meaningful speculative premium on this reference; price tracks condition.
The caliber 774 (Valjoux 7750 base) carries a recommended service interval of 5 to 7 years, with full service cost typically ranging from $400 to $700 at a qualified independent. The HEV and chronograph seals should be pressure-tested at any service given the 1000m rating. Oris parts availability is good and the 7750 architecture means most independent watchmakers can handle it without factory routing.
Community + OSINT signals haven’t landed for this reference yet. We don’t publish a rating against zero signal — the number would mean nothing. Editorial body + caliber + market value still surface above; ratings appear once the signal corpus does.
Column-wheel architecture through caseback is mandatory; any cam-actuated layout is a non-genuine movement.
| Area | What to check | What is correct | Red flag |
|---|---|---|---|
| caseback | Column-wheel architecture | Column wheel visible through caseback; Oris Cal. 774 in-house flyback layout | Cam-actuated layout; non-genuine movement; column wheel absent |
| movement | Flyback reset speed | Instantaneous chronograph reset on flyback pusher | Delayed reset; mechanism wear or damage |
| case | 500m WR case integrity | Screw-down crown and caseback intact; 500m WR rating requires correct sealing | Non-screw-down crown; any case modification that compromises water resistance |